Poetry: By: Gilene R. Baguing

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Poetry

By: Gilene R. Baguing


 A type of literature
that expresses ideas,
feelings, or tells a
story in a specific
form (usually using
lines and stanzas).

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POINT OF VIEW IN POETRY
POET SPEAKER
The poet is the The speaker of the
author of the poem poem is the
“narrator” of the
poem

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Poetry Elements
Writers use many elements to create their
poems. These elements include:
 Sound Devices
 Imagery
 Form
 Mode/ Tone
 Theme

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1. Sound
Writers love to use interesting sounds in
their poems. After all, poems are meant
to be heard. These sound devices include:
 Rhythm
 Rhyme
 Repetition
 Alliteration
 Onomatopoeia

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Rhythm
 Rhythm is the flow of the
beat in a poem.
 Gives poetry a musical
feel.
 Can be fast or slow,
depending on mood and
subject of poem.
 You can measure rhythm
in meter, by counting the
beats in each line.

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Rhythm Example
The Pickety Fence by David McCord
The pickety fence
The pickety fence
Give it a lick it's
The pickety fence
Give it a lick it's
A clickety fence
Give it a lick it's a lickety fence
Give it a lick
Give it a lick
Give it a lick
With a rickety stick
pickety The rhythm in this poem is fast –
pickety to match the speed of the stick
striking the fence.
pickety
pick.
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Rhythm Example
Where Are You Now?
When the night begins to fall
And the sky begins to glow
You look up and see the tall
City of lights begin to grow –
In rows and little golden squares
The lights come out. First here, then there
Behind the windowpanes as though
A million billion bees had built The rhythm in this poem is
Their golden hives and honeycombs slow – to match the night
Above you in the air. gently falling and the
lights slowly coming on.
By Mary Britton Miller

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Rhyme
 Rhymes are words that
end with the same sound.
(Hat, cat and bat rhyme.)
 Rhyming sounds don’t
have to be spelled the
same way. (Cloud and
allowed rhyme.)
 Rhyme is the most
common sound device in
poetry.

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Rhyming Patterns/ Scheme
 A rhyme scheme is a  AABB – lines 1 & 2 rhyme
pattern of rhyme and lines 3 & 4 rhyme
(usually end rhyme, but  ABAB – lines 1 & 3 rhyme
not always). and lines 2 & 4 rhyme
 ABBA – lines 1 & 4 rhyme
 It uses the letters of the and lines 2 & 3 rhyme
alphabet to represent  ABCB – lines 2 & 4 rhyme
sounds to be able to and lines 1 & 3 do not
visually “see” the rhyme
pattern.

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AABB Rhyming Pattern
First Snow

Snow makes whiteness where it falls.


The bushes look like popcorn balls.
And places where I always play,
Look like somewhere else today.
By Marie Louise Allen

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ABAB Rhyming Pattern
Oodles of Noodles

I love noodles. Give me oodles.


Make a mound up to the sun.
Noodles are my favorite foodles.
I eat noodles by the ton.

By Lucia and James L. Hymes, Jr.

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ABBA Rhyming Pattern
From “Bliss”

Let me fetch sticks,


Let me fetch stones,
Throw me your bones,
Teach me your tricks.
By Eleanor Farjeon

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ABCB Rhyming Pattern

The Alligator

The alligator chased his tail


Which hit him in the snout;
He nibbled, gobbled, swallowed it,
And turned right inside-out.
by Mary Macdonald

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Repetition
 Repetition occurs when
poets repeat words, phrases,
or lines in a poem.
 Creates a pattern.
 Increases rhythm.
 Strengthens feelings, ideas
and mood in a poem.

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Repetition Example
The Sun

Some one tossed a pancake,


A buttery, buttery, pancake.
Someone tossed a pancake
And flipped it up so high,
That now I see the pancake,
The buttery, buttery pancake,
Now I see that pancake
Stuck against the sky.

by Sandra Liatsos

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Alliteration
 Alliteration is the
repetition of the first
consonant sound in
words, as in the
nursery rhyme “Peter
Piper picked a peck
of pickled peppers.”
The snake slithered silently
along the sunny sidewalk.

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Alliteration Example
This Tooth
I jiggled it
jaggled it
jerked it.
I pushed
and pulled
and poked it.
But –
As soon as I stopped,
And left it alone
This tooth came out
On its very own!
by Lee Bennett Hopkins
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Onomatopoeia
 Words that represent the
actual sound of something
are words of onomatopoeia.
Dogs “bark,” cats “purr,”
thunder “booms,” rain
“drips,” and the clock “ticks.”
 Appeals to the sense of
sound.

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Onomatopoeia Example
Listen
Scrunch, scrunch, scrunch.
Crunch, crunch, crunch.
Frozen snow and brittle ice
Make a winter sound that’s nice
Underneath my stamping feet
And the cars along the street.
Scrunch, scrunch, scrunch.
Crunch, crunch, crunch.
by Margaret Hillert
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2. Imagery
 Imagery is the use of words
to create pictures, or images,
in your mind.
 Appeals to the five senses:
smell, sight, hearing, taste
Five Senses
and touch.
 Details about smells, sounds,
colors, and taste create
strong images.
 To create vivid images
writers use figures of speech.
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2. Forms of Poetry
There are many forms of poetry including the:
 Couplet
 Tercet
 Acrostic
 Cinquain
 Haiku
 Senryu
 Concrete Poem
 Free Verse
 Limerick

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Lines and Stanzas
 Most poems are March
written in lines. A blue day
 A group of lines in A blue jay
a poem is called a
stanza. And a good beginning.
 Stanzas separate
ideas in a poem. One crow,
They act like Melting snow –
paragraphs.
Spring’s winning!
 This poem has two
stanzas. By Eleanor Farjeon

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Couplet
 A couplet is a poem,
or stanza in a poem,
written in two lines.
 Usually rhymes.

The Jellyfish
Who wants my jellyfish?
I’m not sellyfish!
By Ogden Nash

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Tercet
 A tercet is a poem, or
stanza, written in three
lines.
 Usually rhymes.
 Lines 1 and 2 can
rhyme; lines 1 and 3 can
rhyme; sometimes all 3
lines rhyme. Winter Moon
How thin and sharp is the moon tonight!
How thin and sharp and ghostly white
Is the slim curved crook of the moon tonight!
By Langston Hughes
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Quatrain
 A quatrain is a poem, or
stanza, written in four
lines.
 The quatrain is the most
common form of stanza
used in poetry.
The Lizard
 Usually rhymes.
 Can be written in variety The lizard is a timid thing
of rhyming patterns. That cannot dance or fly or sing;
He hunts for bugs beneath the floor
And longs to be a dinosaur.
By John Gardner

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Traditional Cinquain
 A cinquain is a poem
written in five lines that do

 
not rhyme.
 Traditional cinquain has
five lines containing 22                                                     

syllables in the following            


pattern: Oh, cat
Line 1 – 2 syllables are you grinning
Line 2 – 4 syllables curled in the window seat
Line 3 – 6 syllables
as sun warms you this December
Line 4 – 8 syllables
Line 5 – 2 syllables morning?
By Paul B. Janezco

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Word-Count Cinquain
 Word-count cinquain for younger
students uses the following
pattern:

Line 1: One word (title)


Line 2: Two words (describe the
title)
Line 3: Three words (describe an
action) Owl
Line 4: Four words (describe a Swift, ferocious
feeling)
Watches for food
Line 5: One word (another word for
title) Soaring through the night
Hunter
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Diamante/ Septet
Diamante Pattern
 A diamante is a seven- Line 1 – Your topic (noun)
line poem written in the
Line 2 – Two adjectives about
shape of a diamond.
Line 3 – Three “ing” words about
 Does not rhyme.
Line 4 – Four nouns or short
 Follows pattern. phrase linking topic (or topics)
 Can use synonyms or Line 5 – Three “ing” words about
antonyms. Line 5 – Two adjectives about
Line 7 – Your ending topic (noun)

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Synonym Diamante
Monsters
Creepy, sinister,
Hiding, lurking, stalking,
Vampires, mummies, werewolves and more –
Chasing, pouncing eating,
Hungry, scary,
Creatures

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Antonym Diamante
Day
Bright, sunny,
Laughing, playing, doing,
Up in the east, down in the west –
Talking, resting, sleeping,
Quiet, dark,
Night

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Haiku
 A haiku is a Japanese
poem with 3 lines of 5, 7,
and 5 syllables. (Total of
17 syllables.)
 Does not rhyme.
 Is about an aspect of
Little frog among
nature or the seasons.
rain-shaken leaves, are you, too,
 Captures a moment in
time. splashed with fresh, green paint?
by Gaki

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Senryu

 A senryu follows same


pattern as haiku.
 Written in 3 unrhymed
lines of 5, 7, and 5
syllables, with total of 17
syllables.
First day, new school year,
 Is about human nature,
rather than natural world. backpack harbors a fossil…
last June’s cheese sandwich.

By Cristine O’Connell George

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Concrete Poem
 A concrete poem (also
called shape poem) is
written in the shape of
its subject.
 The way the words are
arranged is as important
what they mean.
 Does not have to rhyme.

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Free Verse
Revenge
 A free verse poem
When I find out
does not use rhyme or who took
patterns. the last cooky

 Can vary freely in out of the jar


and left
length of lines, me a bunch of
stanzas, and subject. stale old messy
crumbs, I'm
going to take
me a handful
and crumb
up someone's bed.

By Myra Cohn Livingston

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Acrostic
 In an acrostic poem
the first letter of each
line, read down the
page, spells the
subject of the poem.
Loose brown parachute
 Type of free verse
poem. Escaping
 Does not usually And
rhyme. Floating on puffs of air.
by Paul Paolilli

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Limerick

 A limerick is a funny
poem of 5 lines.
 Lines 1, 2 & 5 rhyme.
 Lines 3 & 4 are
shorter and rhyme. There Seems to Be a Problem
 Line 5 refers to line 1. I really don’t know about Jim.

 Limericks are a kind When he comes to our farm for a swim,

of nonsense poem. The fish as a rule,


jump out of the pool.
Is there something the matter with him?
By John Ciardi
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4. Mood
 Mood is the atmosphere, or
emotion, in the poem
created by the poet.
 Can be happy, angry, silly,
sad, excited, fearful or
thoughtful.
 Poet uses words and
images to create mood.
 Author’s purpose helps
determine mood.

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Mood - Barefoot Days
Barefoot Days by Rachel Field
In the morning, very early,
That’s the time I love to go
Barefoot where the fern grows curly
And grass is cool between each toe,
On a summer morning-O!
On a summer morning!
That is when the birds go by
Up the sunny slopes of air,
And each rose has a butterfly
Or a golden bee to wear;
The mood in this poem is
And I am glad in every toe – happy. What clues in the
Such a summer morning-O! poem can you use to
Such a summer morning! determine the mood?

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Mood - Poem
Poem
I loved my friend.
He went away from me.
There’s nothing more to say.
The poem ends,
Soft as it began –
I loved my friend:
The mood in this poem is
By Langston Hughes sad. What clues in the
poem can you use to
determine the mood?

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Mood - Joyful
Joyful

A summer day is full of ease,


a bank is full of money,
our lilac bush is full of bees,
And I am full of honey.
By Rose Burgunder The mood in this poem is
happy. What clues in the
poem can you use to
determine the mood?

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Tone
 a reflection of the poet’s attitude
toward the subject of a poem. Tone
can be serious, sarcastic, humorous,
etc.

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5. Theme
- The theme of a poem is the central or
main idea

- To identify a poems theme, ask


yourself what ideas or insight about
life or human nature you have found in
the poem.

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Syllables and Word Count
Syllables
- are the unit of sound that construct words. These
units provide the basic framework for poetry

Methods on Syllables count unstressed


a.The Clap Method stressed
b.The Writing Method
c.The Chin Method

Word Count
- counting number of words in a line or stanza.
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